@kyle getting the Librem 14 was in no small part so I’d have the power to do some (mechanical) modeling and embedded programming on a system completely removed from $dayJob (my work AppVM was not and will not be part of the restore). Helping move electrification forward in a meaningful and open way is somewhere I think I can contribute.
@kyle this is a big part of the reason I will keep paying to fix my Tacoma for a long time to come. It doesn’t have GPS or an infotainment center. It does however have some surely proprietary sensors that I’m screwed if Toyota ever stops making (and one of mine breaks). In the early days of EVs many SUVs and trucks had conversion kits to electric drive, and in the future I may look at doing similar with my Tacoma if batteries ever get light and (power) dense enough.
Now that cars have become rolling smartphones, it's been pretty disappointing to see them copy some of the worst practices from the smartphone world. I wrote an article that talks about some of those problems. [CW: Tesla negativity] https://puri.sm/posts/locked-in-a-remote-control-car/
Another look at my @purism Librem 14 - this time on the battery life front in Qubes OS doing basic tasks:
@kyle it’s a totally different feeling for me as well. Definitely makes sense to me.
@kyle lol, that’s a good one
Somehow, despite many years of international travel and expat assignments, I never noticed that indeed everyone else’s periodic tables do say Aluminium. It’s we Americans doing it wrong, and the hard line I drew in the sand about this manipulation of the name of an ELEMENT was based on a web of lies. This may be as close to an existential crisis as I ever get. I am shook.
First impressions of my new Librem 14 from @purism. In just before I take a vacation inside my vacation!
https://ajmartinez.com/tech/posts/202119-001-librem14
More to follow in a few weeks once I've had more time on the machine.
The Librem 14 has great battery life and in this post we put it through its paces from low-power idle tests all the way to a torture test that pegs all 12 threads at 100%. Check out this post and video for all of our tests and results: https://puri.sm/posts/librem-14-runtime-and-charging/
@purism even running Qubes OS it's pretty good. I'll be running some tests in a week and share my findings related to "normal" and "heavy" workloads on mine.
@kyle actually default is now unencrypted boot with encrypted root on an lvm thin provisioned volume. That was the only option that worked. Going manual to do away with the unwanted swap broke it every single time, and I don’t care to waste any more of my vacation messing with it. When I get back to NL with a gigabit pipe I may try again, since restoring from backups is super fast now.
Ran into some trouble with my initial Qubes install on the Librem 14, as apparently changing any options in the disk partitioning unchecks the encryption box and renders it uncheckable. This is clearly a Qubes problem, and not a Purism problem, but it led me down a fun path of reinstalling a dozen times or so. That said, now I’m very well acquainted with PureBoot, my TPM, and my Librem Key.
I’ll work on A Rust Site Engine a bit on the Librem 14 today and see how I like it for Rust development.
@kyle being remote hasn’t stopped me from helping junior staff, or celebrating major events and accomplishments. This sounds like it comes from a narrow point of view that can’t understand the ways the culture credited with building their foundation probably actually slowed their growth. Unless I’m back doing mechanical design where I need to be on site with machining and fabrication to avoid scrapping million dollar pieces of steel I don’t need to be in the office.
@leimon my order was one of the first, or so I was told. My Qubes installation journey wasn’t the smoothest process, and I’ve not worked out exactly why yet, but once I got past that hurdle I was pretty pleased with everything but the keyboard. Most of my use is on a desk with my Drop ALT. I left that behind for my vacation and don’t intend to use the machine much until June, so maybe you’ll have your own impressions by the time I write up mine!
@stevenroose Thinkpad keyboards lead the pack. I do like my T460s KB. The X390 is notably worse. They’ve been in steady decline since X200. I’ve used worse than the one in the Librem 14, and I will surely adapt as I always have. In any case, I mostly dock my machine and use a mechanical so it won’t annoy me often.
@stevenroose everything fits together right. It feels nice. I hate the keyboard, but I expect to hate laptop keyboards as that’s now an industry standard. There’s probably some secret international governance body that prohibits the design or sale of a laptop keyboard that doesn’t suck.
I like to work with my hands. That may mean hammering out solutions to complex problems in #Python or #Rust, building things in my shop, or spinning yarn to knit something warm. You’ll likely see some of all of that here. By day (and sometimes night) I keep >13k nodes and services alive in the Electric Vehicle sector.
PGP: FCBF 31FD B34C 8555 027A D1AF 0AD2 E852 9F5D 85E1